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You are here: Home / Teams / Génétique des Variations Intra-Espèce - G. Yvert-OLD / Publications / Natural sequence variants of yeast environmental sensors confer cell-to-cell expression variability.

Natural sequence variants of yeast environmental sensors confer cell-to-cell expression variability.

Steffen Fehrmann, Helene Bottin-Duplus, Andri Leonidou, Esther Mollereau, Audrey Barthelaix, Wu Wei, Lars M Steinmetz, and Gael Yvert (2013)

Mol Syst Biol, 9:695.

Living systems may have evolved probabilistic bet hedging strategies that generate cell-to-cell phenotypic diversity in anticipation of environmental catastrophes, as opposed to adaptation via a deterministic response to environmental changes. Evolution of bet hedging assumes that genotypes segregating in natural populations modulate the level of intraclonal diversity, which so far has largely remained hypothetical. Using a fluorescent P(met17)-GFPreporter, we mapped four genetic loci conferring to a wild yeast strain an elevated cell-to-cell variability in the expression of MET17, a gene regulated by the methionine pathway. A frameshift mutation in the Erc1p transmembrane transporter, probably resulting from a release of laboratory strains from negative selection, reduced P(met17)-GFP expression variability. At a second locus, cis-regulatory polymorphisms increased mean expression of the Mup1p methionine permease, causing increased expression variability in trans. These results demonstrate that an expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) can simultaneously have a deterministic effect in cis and a probabilistic effect in trans. Our observations indicate that the evolution of transmembrane transportergenes can tune intraclonal variation and may therefore be implicated in both reactive and anticipatory strategies of adaptation.

 
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